PlanWare's Blogtag:www.planware.org,2009-04-21:/blog//12012-05-06T17:00:38ZMovable Type Commercial 4.25Plan to Avoid Business Failuretag:www.planware.org,2012:/blog//1.2762012-05-06T16:56:29Z2012-05-06T17:00:38ZUse market research to confirm demand and assess suitability of proposed offerings.
Create a management team to offset any gaps in experience or expertise.
Raise equity to reduce exposure to interest rate changes, reduce gearing etc.
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Business failure is a distinct possibility for many businesses, especially for start-ups during the so-called three-year "valley of death". A key to getting through these years is to avoid the obvious mistakes. Generally speaking, businesses fail for significant and substantial reasons which are often very evident to outsiders. Insiders often fail to see them because of their closeness, determination and so on. Areas where failure is most likely to occur include finance. markets/sales, offerings, management and operations. See a detailed listing of possible reasons for business failure.

Clearly, there are very many reasons as to why businesses fail. The key point is that causes are usually very apparent (especially with hindsight) and the trick is to anticipate them by executing appropriate tactics and strategies from the outset. Three examples:

Use market research to confirm demand and assess suitability of proposed offerings.

Create a management team to offset any gaps in experience or expertise.

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Traps to Avoid When Preparing Financial Projectionstag:www.planware.org,2012:/blog//1.2702012-02-19T10:06:52Z2012-02-19T10:11:57ZWhen preparing financial projections for your business plan, be conscious of the pitfalls and dangers listed below. These can arise as the result of a lack of foresight or insight, or because of excessive optimism. As they can lead to...PlanWarehttp://www.planware.org/
When preparing financial projections for your business plan, be conscious of the pitfalls and dangers listed below. These can arise as the result of a lack of foresight or insight, or because of excessive optimism. As they can lead to underestimation of the resources required to develop a business with potentially disastrous consequences, it can be counterproductive to overstate its potential.

Financial Planning Traps

Using financial forecasting as a substitute for business planning.

Ignoring historic trends or performances at company, sectoral and national levels.

Realistic views should always be taken of a business's prospects, prospective profits, funding requirements etc. There is often merit in compiling "worst" case projections to complement "most likely" or "best" forecasts.

In practice, the realization of financial projections, especially for a new business without any trading history, might easily take twice as long and cost twice as much as expected. This is the double (costs), double (time) or half (revenues) rule.

Remember that it is much less painful to deal with a flaw in a business at the planning stage, than later on when commitments have been made and the business has started trading.

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How NOT to Write a Business Plantag:www.planware.org,2011:/blog//1.2602011-12-04T11:32:35Z2011-12-04T11:49:57ZBased on experience reviewing hundreds of business plans for new and small businesses mainly in the "tech" space, I drafted the following list of common mistakes and flaws seen in plans.PlanWarehttp://www.planware.org/
Follow them if you want to write a trulydreadful business plan and avoid them if you wish to write a good plan:

Don't include a contents list, don't number any pages and don't follow any consistent approach for section heading etc.

Do write the plan's summary before you write the plan, or, better still, don't include any summary.

Do develop your business strategies and ideas progressively as you write the plan. It will draw readers into the process and make the ending more unexpected !

Do start the plan with your financial projections - the more detail and tables the better !

Don't summarize the projections - let readers figure out the full-year totals, profits, cash flows and so on for themselves.

If you include projected balance sheets, make sure that they don't balance.

Don't produce any separate cash flow forecasts, just rename the P&L or income projections.

Do ensure that your financial projections indicate 40% profit margins in the third year. If raising external capital, do explain that the projected return to investors will exceed 100% per annum within three years.

Do mention in the marketing section that your proposed offering has no competition. This will save you having to do any market analysis.

Do base the plan's marketing section around a few quotes from research reports that you found on the web.

Don't consider customer behavior, needs or trends unless you wish to present a series of supportive (unresearched) theories that will support your plans.

Do base your sales projections on the presumption that you will gain, at least, a 1% share of the total market and don't bother with any market segmentation.

Do pad out your sales plan with lots of buzz words like customer-driven, first-to-market, market-led. Do underpin it with a disproportionately small (or large) marketing budget but don't be too explicit as to how, where and when it will be spent.

Don't include any background to your business idea/invention, progress to date or current status.

Do spend at least ten pages describing your offering - do make this as detailed and technical as possible to impress your readers. Don't mention any benefits as these should be obvious !

Do anticipate technical breakthroughs and new offerings but don't discuss related costs or risks.

Do include a 6-8 page CV for yourself but don't worry about building a management team or sorting out operational issues like production, delivery etc. Do make some heroic assumptions about these matters and do pledge to address them at a later date.

Do spend as little time as possible on the plan but do make sure that it runs to at least sixty pages even if this entails lots of padding and inclusion of superfluous or irrelevant material.

Do use as wide a variety of font types, sizes and colors as possible to add style to your plan and don't bother using a spell checker.

Don't let a qualified outsider see your emerging plan and don't bother with reading over or redrafting.

More seriously, if you reverse each Do and Don't, you'll have a useful guide for preparing a sound business plan. You can get this list in a printable checklist format at Checklist for Better Business Plans.

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Time Required to Produce a Business Plantag:www.planware.org,2011:/blog//1.2582011-11-13T12:04:44Z2011-11-13T12:10:44ZHow long should it take to write a business plan and how should the time be allocated?
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How long should it take to write a business plan and how should the time be allocated?

Some useful answers to these questions can be gleamed from an ongoing survey being conducted by PlanWare amongst people who have prepared written business plans.

Based on over two thousand responses, more than one-third (38%) of the respondents spent less than a month on their plan; a similar proportion (37%) worked on their plan for 2-3 months; and the balance (25%) spent several months on the task. More detailed analysis of these findings indicated that:

The elapsed time to prepare comprehensive plans was considerably longer than that for basic plans.

Over one-third of all plans compiled within an elapsed time of one month were used to seek bank loans or approvals from shareholders/directors, or they were compiled for internal/personal use.

About one-third of all plans used to raise venture capital/equity took least three months to research and write.

The survey also showed that the task of actually writing the plan was usually the least time consuming part of the planning process as almost two-thirds (63%) of respondents spend more time researching than writing their plan. For a fifth (21%) of respondents researching and writing times were about equal. Only a small minority (16%) undertook little or no research before drafting their plan.

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New Business Ideastag:www.planware.org,2010:/blog//1.2052011-10-04T10:38:29Z2011-10-07T09:55:40ZThis entry deals with the tricky task of assessing new business ideas. Having built up a moderate list of ideas, these must be evaluated so that a short-list of preferred options with the greatest potential and lowest risk can be...PlanWarehttp://www.planware.org/
This entry deals with the tricky task of assessing new business ideas.

Having built up a moderate list of ideas, these must be evaluated so that a short-list of preferred options with the greatest potential and lowest risk can be assessed in greater depth.

One way of evaluating ideas would be to use a simple scoring system using gut-feel with a limited number of criteria such as personal fit, degree of risk, funding need and so on - see a comprehensive list of factors at Getting New Business Ideas.

Before scoring individual ideas, run through the criteria and set what you feel should be minimum desirable scores for each. The resultant total could be used as your overall minimum threshold. If some ideas don't achieve satisfactory scores, drop them and look for better ones.

Once your short-list has been developed, you will need to start devoting substantial time to assessment, research, development and planning. For a start, you could pursue the following tasks:

Bear in mind that the incubation period for a new business can easily last several months or even years. Don't rush into the first feasible idea without letting it incubate or develop in your mind for a reasonable period. There might be a tendency to get all fired up and enthusiastic such that your heart is starting to rule your head. Instead, stand back and think!! Do not be afraid to seek external assistance from professional advisers or from enterprise support organizations which are virtually everywhere. These include SBDCs in the US, Enterprise Agencies & Business Links in the UK, County Enterprise Boards in Ireland, EC BICs throughout the EU and so on......

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Inspiration for Better Business Planningtag:www.planware.org,2010:/blog//1.1982011-09-19T11:40:39Z2011-10-07T09:55:02ZHere are some quotations to motivate and inspire the planning and development of your business: Rise early, work hard, strike oil. (J Paul Getty) The person who doesn't scatter the morning dew will not comb grey hairs (Irish proverb) A...PlanWarehttp://www.planware.org/
Here are some quotations to motivate and inspire the planning and development of your business:

Rise early, work hard, strike oil. (J Paul Getty)

The person who doesn't scatter the morning dew will not comb grey hairs (Irish proverb)

A chicken doesn't stop scratching just because worms are scarce (Grandma's Axiom)

For more quotations see this list and look here for lots of bad advice and decisons !

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Managing a Business Means Managing its Working Capitaltag:www.planware.org,2010:/blog//1.1922011-09-14T16:32:48Z2011-10-07T09:54:20ZCash is a business's life blood and every manager's primary task is to help keep it flowing and to use this cash flow to generate profits. If a business is operating profitably, then it should, in theory, generate cash surpluses....PlanWarehttp://www.planware.org/
Cash is a business's life blood and every manager's primary task is to help keep it flowing and to use this cash flow to generate profits. If a business is operating profitably, then it should, in theory, generate cash surpluses. The faster a business expands, the more cash it will need for working capital and investment.

The cheapest and best sources of cash exist as working capital right within business. Good management of working capital will generate cash will help improve profits and reduce risks.

There are two elements in the business cycle that absorb cash - Inventory (stocks and work-in-progress) and Receivables (debtors owing you money). The main sources of cash are Payables (your creditors) and Equity and Loans.

Cash flow can be significantly enhanced if the receivables are collected faster. Every business needs to know.... who owes them money.... how much is owed.... how long it is owing.... for what it is owed.

Management of payables is just as important as the management of receivables. It is important to look after your creditors - slow payment by you may create ill-feeling and can signal that your company is inefficient (or in trouble!).

Managing inventory is a juggling act. Excessive stocks can place a heavy burden on the cash resources of a business. Insufficient stocks can result in lost sales, delays for customers etc.

When planning the development of a business, it is critical that the impact of working capital be fully assessed when making cashflow forecasts. Our financial planning software packages - Exl-Plan and Cashflow Plan - can facilitate this task as they provide for the setting of targets for receivables, payables and inventory.

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Basic Steps to Starting a Businesstag:www.planware.org,2010:/blog//1.1902011-09-07T17:08:48Z2011-10-07T09:53:39ZSo, you have a solid idea for a business and you are wondering how to turn it into a real business. Try following these steps: Clarify your business idea in terms of what you will offer customers. See getting new...PlanWarehttp://www.planware.org/
So, you have a solid idea for a business and you are wondering how to turn it into a real business.

Refine your business idea and flesh it out so that you can prepare a relatively comprehensive description and market positioning statement (as regards price, features etc.). See product/service descriptions.

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Length of a Business Plantag:www.planware.org,2010:/blog//1.1872011-09-02T11:27:02Z2011-10-07T09:53:01ZWhat is the ideal page length of a business plan? Well, what is the length of a piece of string? The answer really depends on the purpose and scope of the plan - are we talking about a basic or...PlanWarehttp://www.planware.org/
What is the ideal page length of a business plan? Well, what is the length of a piece of string? The answer really depends on the purpose and scope of the plan - are we talking about a basic or comprehensive plan.

Analysis of findings from an ongoing survey about business plans by PlanWare indicates that the main parts (i.e. the body of plan excluding appendices etc.) of many basic plans are under ten pages long whereas comprehensive plans are often 10-25 pages long. More specifically, the analysis found that almost half of all comprehensive plans were at least 26 pages long as compared with just one-tenth of basic plans (see Fig 3 below).

When budgeting your plan's length, go for the shortest possible plan consistent with your business's scale, objective of the plan etc. - aim for quality rather than quantity! Bear in mind that the overall length of the plan is likely to increase as writing progresses. If your plan gets too long, do some ruthless editing and redrafting. If it is any consolation, it should be much easier to shorten a long plan than to lengthen a short one!

Based on the suggested section lengths in our Business Plan Guide, the length of a comprehensive plan could range between 27 to 47 pages (excluding cover, contents list and appendices). This works out at a minimum of about two pages for each main section within the plan. Obviously, this length should be scaled back to about ten pages or so for a new or established business (of almost any size) preparing a basic plan by excluding sections and scaling back the length of remaining sections.

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New Year Resolutions for Better Businesstag:www.planware.org,2009:/blog//1.1822011-08-29T11:00:54Z2011-10-07T09:52:13ZHere are some suggested new year resolutions for 2010 for better business planning applicable to any established business: Get or maintain a tight grip on cash flows. For help, see the Checklist for Improving Cash Flow and Cashflow Plan. For...PlanWarehttp://www.planware.org/
Here are some suggested new year resolutions for 2010 for better business planning applicable to any established business:

In simple terms, marketing and sales plans should cover the 4Ps - Product, Price, Place and Promotion. The following issues need to be considered:

What are the key market entry/development strategies? Explain how your business will continue to market its products/services and sell them to customers.

What are the plans and projected costs for marketing, selling, promotion, advertising, representation etc.? Discuss conversion rates and cost effectiveness.

How will your products be presented to customers? Discuss packaging, physical distribution, sales support and product support and forecast the related costs.

Explain pricing policies and credit terms (be realistic !). What discounts will apply and to whom? Will there be bad debts and what provisions should be made?

What will be the end-user prices for each market and offering?

Assess the competitiveness of your business's offerings in terms of price, quality, features etc. at the level of sales outlets or end-users.

How will you deal with the competitors and how will they respond?

What are your contingency plans in the event of sales targets not being fully realized?

Based on these marketing strategies and plans, you can compile detailed sales (volumes and prices) projections and marketing expenditure forecasts for your various segments and products/services. These projections should be monthly for one year ahead (or longer if the business is seasonal or growing rapidly) and either annual or quarterly (much better) thereafter to cover 3-5 years.

Also check out the Plan Write Market Planner - a software tool to generate a comprehensive marketing plan with examples, checklists and expert advice.

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Improving Cash Flowtag:www.planware.org,2009:/blog//1.1752011-08-15T13:58:43Z2011-10-07T09:50:39ZCash flow is the life blood of every business and lack of cash is a much more significant cause of business failure than trading losses. The management and preservation of cash is a priority task which must be performed day...PlanWarehttp://www.planware.org/
Cash flow is the life blood of every business and lack of cash is a much more significant cause of business failure than trading losses. The management and preservation of cash is a priority task which must be performed day in and day out in every business. This task is so routine that its importance is often overlooked.

Central to any program to improve cash flow is an accounting system to handle inventory, invoicing, receivables and payables. Allied to this is the need for frequently-updated cash flow projections to provide early warnings of possible liquidity problems and a foundation for improvement plans.

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Raising Finance from Venture Capitalists, Business Angels & Bankstag:www.planware.org,2009:/blog//1.1672011-08-07T12:17:39Z2011-10-07T09:50:01ZPlanWarehttp://www.planware.org/
When preparing financial projections for a business plan, you may need to consider raising finance from venture capitalists, business angels and/or banks.

Here are some tips. They assume you are using a fully-integrated financial planning tool, like our Exl-Plan range, to prepare projected income statements, cashflows and balance sheets covering a time horizon of 3-5 years or so.

Use "most likely" (highly probable) assumptions to generate initial projections but exclude, for time being, any assumptions about external funding. When the financial model runs without this funding, it should automatically build up a substantial overdraft (cash shortfall) based on projected net cash outflows.

Review the trend in the overdraft and identify its peak month/quarter and value.

Review the desired mix of external funding - overdraft, grants, loans and equity - and inject funding amounting to the peak overdraft into the model.

Rerun the model and check that key ratios - especially debt/equity and quick ratio - look sensible for all months/years. If needs be, adjust the mix of funding to improve these ratios. For example, if the debt/equity ratio is 100%, consider reducing the debt level and increasing the equity content.

Take note of the timing and amounts of proposed external funding.

Undertake sensitivity analyses by running the model with revised projections for sales volumes/prices, costs and/or overheads in order to identify a realistic "worst" case.

Repeat points 2-5 to determine "worst" case funding.

If desired, raise the projections with altered sales volumes/prices, costs and/or overheads to see the "best" case funding and help sell the business's potential to investors.

Base funding needs on the "most likely" projections but take account of higher requirements suggested by the "worst" case. - it may be prudent to seek too much money rather than too little!

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Review of a Business Plantag:planware.org,2009:/blog//1.1602011-07-26T14:18:35Z2011-10-07T09:49:03ZIt is unusual for business and personal interests to coincide as has happened in recent weeks as a result of the publication by the Irish Government of a business plan for the National Asset Management Agency (Nama). Nama is being...PlanWarehttp://www.planware.org/
It is unusual for business and personal interests to coincide as has happened in recent weeks as a result of the publication by the Irish Government of a business plan for the National Asset Management Agency (Nama).

Nama is being set up to effectively manage the world's largest property portfolio valued at about €77 billion (US$ 115 billion). Its purpose is to rescue the Irish banking sector from insolvency and to restart normal lending in the Irish economy.

The need for Nama has arisen from an unrestrained property binge over the past decade led by ineffectual financial regulation, foolish bankers, greedy developers and an incompetent government. Excuse the intemperate language but there is no other way to describe their roles in pushing Ireland into the worst recession experienced by any developed nation since the Great Depression. This resulted in a huge oversupply of over-priced commercial property and hundreds of thousands of house owners facing into negative equity. More on the Irish property boom. Several books have been published recently about the role of politicans, bankers, regulators and developers in stoking the boom - see our bookshelf to browse or buy the best sellers.

Nama aims to address the bubble in commercial property by purchasing all the property-related loans of five Irish-owned banks for €54 billion with a view to securing capital and interest payments of these loans from developers over the next decade. While the Government accepts that it is overpaying for these loans, it expects (hopes?) to make a profit of over €5 billion overall based on its business plan.

Critics of Nama argue that Irish taxpayers could lose up to €10-15 billion according as many developers default on their loans. Brian Flanagan, founder of the PlanWare site has been deeply critical of Nama. Read his assessment of Nama's business plan here.

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Get New Business Ideastag:planware.org,2009:/blog//1.1592011-07-24T11:34:41Z2011-10-07T09:48:25ZHere are some tips on getting ideas for a new or established business. Bear in mind that ideas could be based on any of the following fundamental approaches: A manufactured product where you buy materials or parts and make up...PlanWarehttp://www.planware.org/
Here are some tips on getting ideas for a new or established business.

Bear in mind that ideas could be based on any of the following fundamental approaches:

A manufactured product where you buy materials or parts and make up the product(s) yourself.

A distributed product where you buy product from a wholesaler/MLM, retailer, or manufacturer.

A service which you provide.

You should narrow your search to specific market or product areas as quickly as possible. For example, the "food business" is too broad a search area. Do you mean manufacturing, distribution or retailing, or do you mean fresh, frozen, pre-prepared etc. or do you mean beverages, sauces, confectionery etc.? It is better to pursue several specific ideas (hypotheses) rather than one diffuse concept which lacks specifics and proves impossible to research and evaluate.

When looking a market, segment it and keep segmenting so as to drill down to possible opportunities.

Generally, you should always aim for quality rather than cheapness. Be very cautious about pursuing ideas which involve any prospect of price wars or are very price sensitive; getting sucked into short-lived fads; or having to compete head-to-head with large, entrenched businesses.